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Humor and Religion. by Don L. F. Nilsen and Alleen Pace Nilsen. History of Five Religions:. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-sIF78QYCI. Laughter in the Bible. “When laughter is mentioned in the Bible, it is associated with one of three things.” “In descending order, they are: Hostility
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Humor and Religion by Don L. F. Nilsen and Alleen Pace Nilsen
History of Five Religions: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-sIF78QYCI
Laughter in the Bible • “When laughter is mentioned in the Bible, it is associated with one of three things.” • “In descending order, they are: • Hostility • Foolishness • Joy” (Morreall [2008] 212)
Laughter and Hostility • For laughter and hostility, consider Psalm 59:4-8 which implores God to “have no mercy on villains and traitors…. But you, O Lord, laugh at them, and deride all the nations” (Morreall [2008] 212) Laughter and Foolishness • For laughter and foolishness, consider Genesis 17:17 When God tells Abraham at age 99 that he and his aged wife Sarah will have a son:
Abraham “fell on his face and laughed.” • On hearing the news, Sarah also laughed with disbelief, and “when God confronted her, she compounded her foolishness by denying that she had laughed.” (Genesis 18:12-15; Morreall [2008] 212)
Laughter is again associated with foolishness in a Bible passage which reads: • “Sorrow is better than laughter, for by sadness of countenance the heart is made glad.” • “The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning; but the heart of fools is in the house of mirth. (Ecclesiastes 7:3-6; Morreall [2008] 213)
Laughter and Joy • But laughter can also be associated with joy in the Bible as in: • “When the lord restored the fortunes of Zion, we were like those who dream. Then our mouth was filled with laughter, and our tongues with shouts of joy” (Psalm 126:2) • In the New Testament, Jesus says, “Blessed are you who weep now, for you shall laugh.” (Luke 6:21; Morreall [2008] 213)
Father Guido Sarducci’s Five Minute University: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kO8x8eoU3L4
Evangelism & Paradox • Evangelism is related to the “awakenings,” and is associated with fundamentalist Christianity. The religious world used to be divided between the Catholics and the Protestants, but now the division is more between the Evangelicals and mainstream religion (Sheffield 17). • The word “evangelism” comes from the Greek “evangelion,” and is composed of “eu” (meaning “well”) and “angelos” (meaning “messenger”). It translates directly into Old English “godspell” or “gospel” (meaning “good word”) (Sheffield 1).
Evangelical television preaches “family values” in which a woman’s place is in the home. But at the same time it places women into very public roles (Sheffield 6). • Many Evangelicals simply refer to themselves as “Christians,” meaning that they have been “born again” or “saved.” This leaves mainstream Christian denominations puzzled or angered by the implication that they are not “Christians” (Sheffield 11).
Conrad Hyers and Harvey CoxThe Bible as Satire and Festival • Conrad Hyers sees in the Story of Jonah as a satire on a reluctant prophet. “In many stories about Jesus, too, he finds wit, imagination, and an openness to people characteristic of someone with a sense of humor.” • In the Bible, Harvey Cox sees festivity in terms of conscious excess, and celebrative affirmation. Cox closes his book by asking Christians to think of Christ as a harlequin!” (Morreall [2008] 232)
John the Evangelist:The Importance of Play • “When people were scandalized at finding him at play with his disciples, he requested one of his questioners who carried a bow to shoot an arrow. When this had been done several times, the man, on being asked wither he could keep on doing so continuously, replied that the bow would break. Whereupon the blessed John pointed the moral that so, too, would the human spirit snap were it never unbent.” (Morreall [2008] 218)
Mr. Diety: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qzf8q9QHfhI
MORMONISMInsider-Humor to Question Attitudes • A cartoon that appeared in the Brigham Young University newspaper in Utah showed a bloodied and battered student rising from a pile of stones that had been thrown at him. • As a campus police officer comes up, the student explains, “All I said was ‘Let he who is without sin, cast the first stone.”
Another Mormon joke is a story about St. Peter taking visitors around Heaven and telling them to tiptoe past the room where the Mormons are…, • because they think they’re the only ones here.”
Digital Story of Nativity & Christmas: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vZrf0PbAGSk
Punishments for Laughter • “The monastery of Columban in Ireland assigned the following punishments: “He who smiles in the service…six strokes; if he breaks out in the noise of laughter, a special fast unless it has happened pardonably.” • “The strongest condemnations of laughter came from monastic leaders. The Essenes, an early Jewish monastic group, had imposed a penance of thirty days for those who ‘guffawed foolishly.’” (Morreall [2008] 217).
TIBETAN BUDDHISMLaughter and Open Mindedness • When John Cleese asked the Dalai Lama why in Tibetan Buddhism people laugh so much he responded that laughter is very helpful to him in teaching and in political negotiations, because when people laugh, it is easier for them to admit new ideas to their minds.
Zen Buddhism • Zen masters use “koans” to break people’s attachments to incongruities like “What is the sound of one hand clapping?” • “The most comic vision among traditional religions is in Zen Buddhism and Taoism, the most tragic vision is in certain forms of Judaism and Calvinist Christianity. Virtually all the New Religions of the past fifty years have embraced the comic vision.” (Morreall [2008] 241)
YURI NIKULIN’S JOKETrousers vs. The World • Yuri Nikulin was known as the “Russian Charlie Chaplin.” When he died in 1997, his New York Times obituary recounted his favorite joke:
An American actor rails at his New York Tailor: • “God needed only seven days to create the universe and it took you 30 days to make a pair of trousers?” • “Yes,” answered the tailor, “But look at the world, and then look at the trousers.”
Handel’s “Halleluia Chorus”: Silent Monks Singing Halleluia: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCFCeJTEzNU&feature=related Hallelujah Chorus: Food Court Flash Mob http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXh7JR9oKVE